A sophisticated robotic dog could be a good companion for your dog - loving grandmother who can't care for a living pet, a new Saint Louis
University study suggests.
In fact, simply focusing on healthier food choices may be a more sustainable weight - loss strategy than trying to reduce portion sizes, a new Penn State
University study suggests.
Then try some yoga for an extra boost: A Washington State
University study suggests that doing yoga three times weekly — the equivalent of a moderate - intensity exercise program — reduces a key marker for stress inside the body, helping to increase immunity.
A new Tel Aviv
University study suggests a novel way of treating the affected areas of the brain that apparently cause freezing of gait.
Replenishing the supply of a molecule that normally activates cannabinoid receptors in the brain could relieve mood and anxiety disorders and enable some people to quit using marijuana, a Vanderbilt
University study suggests.
A recent Carnegie Mellon
University study suggests that hybrid plug - in vehicles would be more expensive over a lifetime of use than comparable gas - powered cars due to the battery's hefty cost.
Yoga can improve mood and mental wellbeing among prisoners, an Oxford
University study suggests, and may also have an effect on impulsive behaviour.
Higher education has already opened the door to equal opportunities for women and minorities in the U.S. — so is it possible that elementary school, as a new Tel Aviv
University study suggests, is the critical juncture at which girls are discouraged from pursuing science and mathematics?
The Newcastle
University study suggests that an as - yet undiscovered gene controls whether a man's sperm contains more X or more Y chromosomes, which affects the sex of his children.
While our conscious experience appears to be continuous, the University of Sydney and Italian
universities study suggests that perception and attention are intrinsically rhythmic in nature.
That Oxford
University study suggested that cutting your meat intake in half could cut your carbon footprint by more than 35 percent.
Findings from an Arizona State
University study suggest you should cut your food into smaller pieces.
Not exact matches
According to a fascinating TED talk by Stanford
University health psychologist Kelly McGonigal, new
studies suggest the answer might be stress.
«Our findings
suggest that frequent e-cigarette use may play an important role in cessation or relapse prevention for some smokers,» Daniel Giovenco, an assistant professor of sociomedical sciences at Columbia
University's Mailman School of Public Health and the lead
study author, said in a statement.
A new
study led by a Michigan State
University business scholar
suggests customer - service workers who fake smile throughout the day worsen their mood and withdraw from work, affecting productivity.
A
University of California, Davis
study suggests focusing on the present may actually lower levels of the stress hormone cortisol.
A 2012
study from the Stanford Graduate School of Business and Cornell
University suggests most workers find comfort in traditional hierarchies because they're predictable and familiar, and their asymmetries create concrete «end points.»
A new
study by Harvard
University and
University of Vermont researchers
suggests that just may be the case, my colleague Aric Jenkins reports.
«The theory is that if new industries that are not competitive are subsidized they will eventually mature and be able to function on their own,» said
University of Guelph economist Glenn Fox at a conference last June, citing
studies suggesting clean energy policies in Denmark, Germany and Spain are a drag on economic growth.
But there's plenty of other research that
suggests tidiness has a downside: a
University of Minnesota
study suggests that people with clean desks make more conventional decisions.
As a 2013
study led by Susan Sprecher at Illinois State
University suggests, simply sharing details about your hobbies and your favorite childhood memories can make you seem warmer and more likable.
A recent
study published by Northern Kentucky
University suggests that mixing alcohol with diet soda results in higher blood alcohol levels than mixing with sugary sodas.
A
study from
University College London
suggested that those who complain of boredom are more likely to die young, and those who report high levels of tedium are much more likely to die from heart disease or stroke.
Sue, who works at Memorial
University, Newfoundland, Canada, first looked at
studies with mice, which he
suggests are «good models for human physiology.»
In his 2010 book Born Entrepreneurs, Born Leaders, Scott Shane, professor of entrepreneurial
studies at Cleveland's Case Western Reserve
University,
suggests that genes don't just influence whether a person will start a business; they may even determine how much money a person will earn.
A 2013
University of California, Berkeley,
study involving participants in an online job market
suggests that employees who know exactly how their pay compares to their peers» exert «significantly more» effort than those who are kept in the dark.
Indeed,
studies suggest that both male and female faculty and students at gender - mixed
universities can often be unconsciously biased against women in STEM classes; yet, those biases aren't as much a concern at women's colleges.1
But advertising from the New York
University Child
Study Center
suggests that worries like these constitute a treatable medical disorder.
«There is a small decline in church attendance over time, but not nearly as large as
suggested in popular culture, or even by some social scientists,» said
University of Nebraska - Lincoln sociologist Philip Schwadel, who conducted the
study.
«Our
study suggests that the less - educated are dropping out of the American religious sector, similarly to the way in which they have dropped out of the American labor market,» said W. Bradford Wilcox, a professor of sociology at the
University of Virginia, who was lead researcher on the project.
Now a new
study from Cambridge
University based on his writings
suggests Saint Patrick was not brought to Ireland as a slave, as the legend has it, but that in fact he may actually have sold slaves his family owned to pay his way to Ireland - in order to avoid a job as a tax collector for the Roman empire.
But a recent
study by the Center for Survey Research (CSR) at the
University of Virginia for Stewardship Journal
suggests that some significant differences are emerging between the leaders of evangelical relief and development (R&D) agencies and their donor constituencies.
A recent
study from Northwestern
University's Feinberg School of Medicine
suggests there may be a link between how active people are in their church and how much they weigh.
Mintz does not refer at all to research by developmental psychologists such as Jay Belsky of London's Birkbeck College and Alan Sroufe of the
University of Minnesota; nor does he cite the huge, multicenter National Institute of Child Health
studies, all of which
suggest that more than 20 hours per week of child care beginning before the age of one correlates with a higher incidence of interpersonal difficulties by early grade school.
In a
study of his earlier pictures, Kolker notes that «Scorsese is interested in the psychological manifestations of individuals who are representative either of a class or of a certain ideological grouping; he is concerned with their relationship to each other or to an antagonistic environment... [and finally] there is no triumph for his characters» (A Cinema of Loneliness [Oxford
University Press, 19881, p. 162) The Jesus of the Last Temptation fits this pattern (as do Travis Bickel in Taxi Driver, Jake LaMotta in Raging Bull and Paul Hackett in After Hours) By eschewing any reference to a resurrection — and, in an interesting theological note, allowing Paul to
suggest that his preaching of the risen Christ is more important than the Jesus of history — Scorsese presents the crucifixion as the final willful act of a man driven by a God who makes strange demands on his followers.
While family scholars acknowledge that
studies in Sweden and Britain have found more instability among same - sex couples, they would contend that research, such as a new
study from Bowling Green State
University, also
suggests that gay and lesbian couples can enjoy more stable relationships when communities extend legal and cultural support to them.
«A recent
study at the
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
suggests that abstinence - only» education can be effective in delaying sexual activity among sixth - and seventh - grade children.
«The changes are primarily due to generation —
suggesting people develop their sexual attitudes while young, rather than everyone of all ages changing at the same time,» said
study leader Jean Twenge, a psychology professor at San Diego State
University.
New research from Harvard
University actually
suggests that attending «religious services» at least once a week will significantly lower your risk of dying over the next decade and a half — and these results have been replicated in enough
studies and populations to be considered highly reliable.
Thus a true Catholic
Studies program, Briel
suggested, offers students an encounter, «not merely with a set of texts but with living Catholic minds who share in that gaudium de veritate, that joy in the truth at the heart of the life of a
university, properly understood.»
Carol Gilligan's
study of the differences in the ways whereby men and women reach moral decisions
suggests another reason for intransigence on this issue (In a Different Voice [Harvard
University Press, 1982]-RRB-.
Dave: Do you know of a remedy for taking away the «burn» after you cut up hot peppers?LizLiz: A
study at the
University of New Mexico
suggested that rubbing your hands with vegetable oil is the best cure.
Responding to a recent
study from the
University of Melbourne
suggesting an increase in soft drink prices would result in reduced consumption, Australian Beverages Council CEO, Geoff Parker said;
A
study conducted at the
University of Oxford
suggests that Alzheimer's and dementia patients have experienced short - term benefits resulting from consuming coconut oil, even though the results may be temporary.
12 August 2016 MEDIA RELEASE
University price hike modelling to reduce soft drink consumption ignores real life Responding to a recent
study from the
University of Melbourne
suggesting an increase in soft drink prices would result in reduced consumption, Australian Beverages Council CEO, Geoff Parker said; «A price hike on soft drinks -LSB-...]
While the produce industry and the federal government have made great strides in protecting the nation's food supply with steps like the Produce Traceability Initiative and the Food Safety Modernization Act, a new
study from the
University of California - Davis
suggests reusable plastic containers may represent a backdoor for contamination.
Keith E. Belk, a Colorado State
University professor who works closely with the beef industry, said research on risks like liver abscesses was more uncertain than many
studies suggested.
Several
university studies have
suggested that capsaicin consumption can aid in weight loss and inhibit tumor growth.
[Note: a 2008
study by researchers at the
University of Florida
suggests that blowing cool, dry air under shoulder pads dramatically reduces the risk of heat illness.
Perhaps not,
suggests M. Christian Green, a senior fellow at the Center for the
Study of Law and Religion at Emory
University and a former lecturer at Harvard Divinity School.